Ends & Values

A Statement of Ends is the mission of our co-op and our overarching goal that guides us in our work. Our current Ends, listed below, were adopted in 2006 and revised in May, 2025.
Ends
E1
Franklin Community Cooperative will be financially sustainable.
E2
Everyone in the community will feel welcome in our stores and meeting places.
E3
The preferences of our diverse community will be met by a range of products and price points, with easy access to information about food choices.
E4
We will have a growing base of customers and member-owners who are committed and engaged.
E5
Our organization will be an engaging workplace of choice.
E6
Our business practices and investments will contribute to a robust local economy and a thriving local food system.
Values
You belong here as a customer, as a member-owner, as an employee.
We offer choice based on our community’s wide range of product preferences and food budgets.
You can trust the quality of your food and know its sources.
We support local farms, producers, economy, and community.
We care about human and environmental health, and about social, racial, and economic justice.
Bylaws
Read our bylaws to learn more about our articles of organization.
The Seven Cooperative Principles
One of the ways cooperatives differ from other business structures is their adherence to cooperative principles and values that reflect social, political, and business concerns. Cooperatives trace the roots of these principles to the Rochdale pioneers, who established the first modern cooperative in Rochdale, England in 1844. These principles have been refined, adapted, and reinterpreted over time. The seven principles used by the International Cooperative Alliance today are generally accepted by cooperatives worldwide.
Cooperatives are also based on the values of self-help, self-responsibility, democracy, equality, equity, and solidarity. Cooperative members believe in the ethical values of honesty, openness, social responsibility, and caring for others.
- Voluntary and Open Membership
Cooperatives are voluntary organizations, open to all people able to use their services and willing to accept the responsibilities of membership, without gender, social, racial, political or religious discrimination. - Democratic Member Control
Cooperatives are democratic organizations controlled by their members – those who buy the goods or use the services of the cooperative – who actively participate in setting policies and making decisions. - Member Economic Participation
Members contribute equally to, and democratically control, the capital of the cooperative. This benefits members in proportion to the business they conduct with the cooperative rather than on the capital invested. - Autonomy and Independence
Cooperatives are autonomous, self-help organizations controlled by their members. If the co-op enters into agreement with other organizations or raises capital from external sources, it is done so based on terms that ensure democratic control by the members and maintains the cooperative’s autonomy. - Education, Training and Information
Cooperatives provide education and training for members, elected representatives, managers and employees so they can contribute effectively to the development of their cooperative. Member also inform the general public about the nature and benefits of cooperatives. - Cooperation among Cooperatives
Cooperatives serve their members most effectively and strengthen the cooperative movement by working together through local, national, regional and international structures. - Concern for Community
While focusing on member needs, cooperatives work for the sustainable development of communities through policies and programs accepted by the members.
Land Acknowledgement
The Franklin Community Co-op’s two store locations occupy land that belongs to the Nipmuc, Pocumtuc, and Wabanaki Confederacy people. As we work to fully embody cooperative values, both Care for Community and Care for the Environment are present in our efforts to support, uplift, and promote Indigenous land stewardship, cultural conservation, and education in our region.
We invite you to learn more about whose land you are on and how you can participate in and support local Indigenous communities. Visit the Northeast Farmers of Color Land Trust to learn more about and support their reparative work in the Northeast.
Green Impact
We work to bring the best local, organic and environmentally sustainable products to our communities and we strive to reduce our environmental and ecological footprint in our day to day operations.
Read the Food Co-op Impact Report 2024 to learn more about the impact co-ops across the country are having.
DEI Statement
Franklin Community Co-op – through introspection by and education with its member-owners, board, and staff – strives to become a fully inclusive, anti-racist, multicultural organization. To this end, we align ourselves with the work of existing anti-racist, multicultural organizations and seek their guidance to move toward meaningful change for the whole community.
As our efforts in this arena of important work continue and grow, we invite our membership and our community to work with us to support both this statement, and the development of plans of action that will further these stated ends.
Product Guidelines
The co-operative retail grocery store acts as the buying and distribution agent of consumers, rather than as the selling agent for wholesalers, producers, and financiers. It is run primarily to serve member-owners’ needs as consumers, rather than to make a profit for shareholders.
- Quality
- High price value: An emphasis on products that are high in price value, i.e. products that are both high in quality and reasonably priced.
- Products that provide consumers with a choice of sizes.
- Products that are part of the Co-op Basics program, in which certain basic foods are
designated as staples and are sold at a lower margin than usual. - Organic
- Not containing genetically modified (GMO) ingredients.
- Local and regional
- Products made by other co-ops
- Products made by small (non-multi-national) or employee-owned producers.
- Whole and minimally processed
- Bulk (not or minimally packaged)
- Honest packaging and labeling
- Free of artificial colors, additives and preservatives
- Processed with minimal sweeteners (except dessert items)
- Products required for diverse diets
- Products using environmentally sound practices
- Products using fair (non-exploitative) labor (including but not limited to Fair Trade & Domestic Fair Trade)
- No irradiated foods
- Grass-fed
- Free-range
- Cruelty-free
- No carcinogens
- Fragrance-free alternatives
Regarding GMOs
Consistent with our belief that consumers have the right to make informed choices about the food we buy, our Co-op strongly and publicly supports the mandatory labeling of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) in the food supply.
Also known as genetic engineering, the laboratory process of injecting genes of one species into the genes of another has come to permeate mainstream agriculture over the past two decades, yet there exist no conclusive long-term studies on the health, environmental, and economic impacts of this new technology.
We believe that our communities have the right to choose what we are feeding ourselves and our families, and to know what those products are and where they come from. We want to give our customers the opportunity to make the most informed choices about the food they purchase, not to take that choice away from them, or make that decision for them.
Under current conditions (due to pollen drift etc.) there is no product that can be guaranteed to be GE/GMO-free (genetically engineered/genetically modified organism). While organic growers cannot control random pollination, they do begin with non-GE seed. Utilization of organic seed is the best practice for farming.
Regarding GMO Salmon
In November 2015 the FDA approved the sale of genetically engineered AquAdvantage salmon. As we continue to support the National Cooperative Grocer’s Association’s position that GMOs should be labeled by manufacturers so that consumers have the information they need to make informed purchasing decisions, we look to the full range of tenets of our own merchandising policy to guide our purchasing decisions, and as such, will not be selling GMO salmon at either Franklin Community Co-op location.
National Co-operative Grocer’s position continues to be that GMOs, including GMO salmon, should be labeled so that consumers have the information they need to make their own purchasing decisions. Learn more about this issue at the EarthJustice website.
Foods We Produce
In production of our own foods, we have eliminated, as much as possible, the main sources of GMOs (beet sugar, corn, soy, canola, and cottonseed). When possible, we use organic (which, by definition is non-GMO) or Verified Non-GMO versions of these ingredients.
We prioritize using organic fruits and vegetables as we also share purchasing with our organic and local produce department. Here is what we use in order to reduce the possibility of GMOs in our Co-op produced foods:
- We use organic oils (canola, olive, corn, palm) in our prepared foods or baked goods.
- We use a non-GMO pan spray.
- We use non-GMO cornstarch
- We do not use corn syrup.
- We use organic rice syrup.
- We use organic cane juice crystals for sugar.
- We use organic tamari (also wheat- and gluten-free).
- We use Bragg’s liquid aminos, which is non-GMO.
- We use organic cornmeal.
- We use organic soy products (tofu, tempeh, tempeh bacon).
- We use non-GMO soy milk & soy creamer.
- We use non-GMO margarine and organic shortening.
- We use rBST-free milk.
- We use sour cream that does not contain cornstarch and is rBST-free.
- We use non-GMO mayonnaise and non-GMO Veganaise.
- We use organic ketchup.
- We use only organic corn (frozen & fresh).
- We use only organic rice, grains, and beans.
- We use organic filo dough and shells.
- All of our spices are non-irradiated and organically sourced when available.
- All of our coffee is organic and Fair Trade.
- All of our flours (wheat, rye, pumpernickle, spelt, rice) are organic or locally grown (which is non-GMO).
A note on eggs, dairy, and meat: It is cost-prohibitive to use all organic for these products. For that reason, it is likely that most of the dairy, eggs, and meat we use comes from animals that consume GMO feed. We do, however, use meats that are hormone-, nitrite-, and nitrate-free.
In Summary
Our Co-op stores will continue to offer a diverse selection of products using the values list of selection criteria stated above. This list of values is a reflection of what member-owners have expressed a desire to have available and in turn are supported through their purchases.
Updated 7/2018
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